From Anne Lamott's FB page - July 27, 2014
Artwork - "Overwhelmed" by Elena Oleniuc
Many mornings I check out the
news as soon as I wake up, because if it turns out that the world is coming to
an end that day, I am going to eat the frosting off an entire carrot cake; just
for a start. Then I will move onto vats of clam dip, pots of crime brûlée,
nachos, M & M's etc. Then I will max out both my credit cards.
I used to think that if the
world--or I--were coming to an end, I'd start smoking again, and maybe have a
cool refreshing pitcher of lime Rickeys. But that's going too far, because if the
world or I was saved at the last minute, I'd be back in the old familiar
nightmare. In 1986, grace swooped down like a mighty mud hen, and fished me out
of that canal. I got the big prize. I can't risk losing it.
But creme brûlée, nachos, maybe
the random Buche Noel? Now you're talking.
The last two weeks have been
about as grim and hopeless as any of us can remember, and yet, I have not
gotten out the lobster bib and fork. The drunken Russian separatists in Ukraine
with their refrigerated train cars? I mean, come on. Vonnegut could not have
thought this up. Dead children children on beaches, and markets, at play, in
the holy land?? Stop.
And let's not bog down on the
stuff that was already true, before Ukraine, Gaza, Arizona, like the
heartbreaking scenes of young refugees at our border, the locals with their
pitchforks. The people in ruins in our own families. Or the tiny problem that
we have essentially destroyed the earth--I know, pick pick pick.
Hasn't your mind just been blown
lately, even if you try not to watch the news? Does it surprise you that a
pretty girl's mind turns to thoughts of entire carrot cakes, and credit cards?
My friend said recently,
"It's all just too Lifey. No wonder we all love TV." Her 16 year old
kid has a brain tumor. "Hey, that's just great, God. Thanks a lot. This
really works for me."
My brother's brand new wife has
tumors of the everything. "Fabulous, God. Loving your will, Dude."
My dog Lily's ear drum burst
recently, for no apparent reason, with blood splatter on the walls on the
entire house--on my sleeping grandson's pillow. Do you think I am well enough
for that?
Let me go ahead and answer. I'm not. It was CSI around here; me with my bad nerves. And it burst again last night.
Let me go ahead and answer. I'm not. It was CSI around here; me with my bad nerves. And it burst again last night.
Crazy!
Did someone here get the latest
updated owner's manual? Were they handed out two weeks ago when I was getting
root canal, and was kind of self-obsessed and out of it? The day before my
dog's ear drum first burst? If so, is there is an index, and if so, could you
look up Totally Fucking Overwhelm?
I have long since weeded out
people who might respond to my condition by saying cheerfully, "God's got
a perfect plan." Really? Thank you! How fun.
There is no one left in my
circle who would dare say, brightly, "Let Go and Let God," because
they know I would come after them with a fork.
It's not that I don't trust God
or grace or good orderly direction anymore. I do, more than ever. I trust in
divine intelligence, in love energy, more than ever, no matter what things look
like, or how long they take. It's just that right now cute little platitudes
are not helpful.
I'm not depressed. I'm
overwhelmed by It All. I don't think I'm a drag. I kind of know what to do. I
know that if I want to have loving feelings, I need to do loving things. It
begins by putting your own oxygen mask on first: I try to keep the patient comfortable.
I do the next right thing: left foot, right foot, left foot, breathe. I think
Jesus had a handle on times like these: get thirsty people water. Feed the
hungry. Try not to kill anyone today. Pick up some litter in your neighborhood.
Lie with your old dog under the bed and tell her what a good job she is doing
with the ruptured ear drum.
I try to quiet the drunken
Russian separatists of my own mind, with their good ideas. I pray. I meditate.
I rest, as a spiritual act. I spring for organic cherries. I return phone
calls.
I remember the poor. I remember
an image of Koko the sign-language gorilla, with the caption, "Law of the
American Jungle: remain calm. Share your bananas." I remember Hushpuppy at
the end of Beasts of the Southern Wild, just trying to take some food home to
her daddy Wink, finally turning to face the hideous beast on the bridge, facing
it down and saying, "I take care care of my own."
I take care of my own. You are
my own, and I am yours--I think this is what God is saying, or trying to, over
the din. We are each other's. There are many forms of thirst, many kinds of
water.